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Memorandum 2005

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Title: Memorandum 2005


1
Memorandum 2005
2
1. AMENDMENTS TO THE LAWS OF THE GAME AND
DECISIONS OF THE BOARD
NOTE All changes to the Laws become effective 1
July 2005 for competitions that begin on that
date or afterward. The clarifications noted are
effective immediately, unless otherwise stated
within this presentation.
3
Law 3 The Number of Players Other Matches
Present Text In other matches, up to six
substitutes may be used.
New Text In national A team matches, up to a
maximum of six substitutes may be used In all
other matches, a greater number of substitutes
may be used provided that the teams concerned
reach agreement on a maximum number the
referee is informed before the match. If the
referee is not informed, or if no agreement is
reached before the match, no more than six
substitutes are allowed.
4
Law 3 The Number of Players Other Matches
Reason This will clarify the present position.
USSF Advice to Referees this language clarifies
the issue of the maximum number of allowed
substitutes in national A team matches.
5
Law 3 The Number of Players Infringements/Sancti
ons Bullet point 3
Present Text Play is restarted with a dropped
ball at the place where it was located when play
was stopped.
New Text Play is restarted with an indirect free
kick at the place where the ball was when play
was stopped.
6
Law 3 The Number of Players Infringements/Sancti
ons Bullet point 3
Reason It should be considered to be an
infringement by the team of the substitute player
who enters the field of play without permission,
and his team should be penalized with an indirect
free kick.
USSF Advice to Referees This change affects
only the prescribed restart. It is now an
indirect free kick rather than a dropped ball.
7
Law 5 Decisions of the Referee
Present Text The referee may only change a
decision on realizing that it is incorrect or, at
his discretion, on the advice of an assistant
referee, provided that he has not restarted play.
New Text The referee may only change a decision
on realizing that it is incorrect or, at his
discretion, on the advice of an assistant
referee, provided that he has not restarted play
or terminated the match.
8
Law 5 Decisions of the Referee
Reason The text needs to be clarified because
of a practical situation that arose in France,
when a referee saw the assistant referee signal
after he had ended the match.
USSF Advice to Referees The only addition to
the language of this provision is or terminated
the match. Accordingly, once a match has ended,
decisions of the referee made immediately prior
to this cannot be changed nor can the referee act
on any advice from an assistant referee.
9
Law 11 Offside New International F. A. Board
Decision 1
In the definition of offside position, nearer to
his opponents goal line means that any part of
his head, body or feet is nearer to his
opponents goal line than both the ball and the
second last opponent. The arms are not included
in this definition.
Reason Football is played with the head, body
and feet. If these are nearer the opponents
goal line, there is a potential advantage. There
is no advantage to be gained if only the arms are
in advance of the opponent.
10
Law 11 Offside New International F. A. Board
Decision 1
USSF Advice to Referees Although it is not
specifically stated, this same concept of nearer
to should be used in determining if an attacker
is in his opponents end of the field (i. e., if
any part of his head, body or feet is past the
midfield line.)
11
Law 11 Offside New International F. A. Board
Decision 2
The definitions of elements of involvement in
active play are as follows
Interfering with play means playing or touching
the ball passed or touched by a teammate.
Interfering with an opponent means preventing
an opponent from playing or being able to play
the ball by clearly obstructing the opponents
line of vision or movements or making a gesture
or movement which, in the opinion of the referee,
deceives or distracts an opponent.
Gaining an advantage by being in that position
means playing a ball that rebounds to him off a
goal post or the crossbar having been in an
offside position or playing a ball that rebounds
to him off an opponent having been in an offside
position.
12
Law 11 Offside New International F. A. Board
Decision 2
Reason These definitions have been tried out
over two seasons and modified following the
approval of the original interpretation by the
IFAB business meeting in September. This IFAB
decision gives the appropriate recognition to the
Laws of the Game booklet.
USSF Advice to Referees These definitions first
appeared in print in Questions and Answers on the
Laws of the Game (2004) and have been extensively
discussed. They clarify but do not change the
accepted approach to offside and the specific
issue of involvement in active play. Referees
are reminded that the reference to playing or
touching the ball does not mean that an offside
infraction cannot be called until an attacker in
an offside position actually touches the ball.
13
Law 12 Fouls and Misconduct Disciplinary
Sanctions
Present Text Only a player or substitute or
substituted player may be shown the red or yellow
card.
New Text Only a player or substitute or
substituted player may be shown the red or yellow
card. The referee has the authority to take
disciplinary sanctions, as from the moment he
enters the field of play until he leaves the
field of play after the final whistle.
14
Law 12 Fouls and Misconduct Disciplinary
Sanctions
Reason It is important to define when the
referee is authorized to show red and yellow
cards. When incidents happen on the pitch right
after the final whistle, a card may now be shown
and it would be more effective than the current
practice of just reporting the incident.
USSF Advice to Referees The new paragraph
confirms that misconduct can occur and be
sanctioned by the display of a red or yellow
card, as appropriate, after a match is over
provided that the incident occurs on the field of
play. The reference to final whistle means the
end of regulation play plus any required
tie-breaking procedures (overtime and/or kicks
from the penalty mark). Incidents beyond the
field of play or after the referee has left the
field should be included in the match report even
though a card is not shown.
15
Law 12 Fouls and Misconduct International FA
Board Decision 4
Present Text A tackle from behind, which
endangers the safety of an opponent, must be
sanctioned as serious foul play.
New Text A tackle, which endangers the safety of
an opponent, must be sanctioned as serious foul
play.
16
Law 12 Fouls and Misconduct Disciplinary
Sanctions
Reason A tackle from behind but also from the
side or the front, which injures or could have
injured an opponent, must be sanctioned as
serious foul play.
USSF Advice to Referees The new text emphasizes
that the direction of the tackle is not relevant
if, in the opinion of the referee, the tackle
endangers the safety of an opponent.
17
Law 14 The Penalty Kick Infringements/Sanctions
The player taking the penalty kick infringes the
Laws of the Game Bullet point 3 Present Text If
the ball does not enter the goal, the kick is not
retaken.
New Text If the ball does not enter the goal, the
referee stops play and restarts the match with an
indirect free kick to the defending team.
18
Law 14 The Penalty Kick Infringements/Sanctions
A team-mate of the player taking the kick enters
the penalty area or moves in front of or within
9.15 m (10 yards) of the penalty mark. Bullet
point 3 Present Text If the ball does not enter
the goal, the kick is not retaken.
New Text If the ball does not enter the goal, the
referee stops play and restarts the match with an
indirect free kick to the defending team.
19
Law 14 The Penalty Kick Infringements/Sanctions
Reason The current text is confusing and leads
to different interpretations.
USSF Advice to Referees Prior to this Law
change, the accepted referee action in either of
the two situations above was to allow play to
continue, except in the specific case of a ball
rebounding to a teammate of the kicker who had
encroached. With this change, the referee will
stop play whenever an attacker violates a
requirement of the penalty kick and will then
restart play with an indirect free kick for the
opposing team where the violation occurred.
20
Law 15 The Throw-In Procedure
Present Text At the moment of delivering the
ball, the thrower
faces the field of play
has part of each foot either on the touch line
or on the ground outside the touch line
uses both hands
delivers the ball from behind and over his head.
The thrower may not touch the ball again until it
has touched another player. The ball is in play
immediately it enters the field of play.
21
Law 15 The Throw-In Procedure
New Text At the moment of delivering the ball,
the thrower
faces the field of play
has part of each foot either on the touch line
or on the ground outside the touch line
uses both hands
delivers the ball from behind and over his head.
The thrower may not touch the ball again until it
has touched another player. All opponents must
stand no less than two metres from the point at
which the throw-in is taken. The ball is in play
immediately after it enters the field of play.
22
Law 15 The Throw-In Procedure
Reason There is an increasing trend for an
opponent to stand immediately in front of the
thrower at a throw-in, with his feet virtually on
the touchline. There is no breach of Law 15 but
without doubt the thrower is being impeded from
completing the throw-in. In addition, there is
the possibility of a confrontational situation
developing between both players. The only
occasions where players currently need not
retreat a prescribed distance at the start or
restart of play is at a dropped ball or a
throw-in and the proposal brings the throw-in in
line with other Laws. A number of member
associations actually unofficially imposed a
prescribed distance in such situations and this
proposed amendment would ensure standardization
of the application of the Laws of the Game.
USSF Advice to Referees Two yards is an
acceptable alternate minimum distance in the
United States. As with other minimum distance
requirements, the failure to retreat this
distance may be considered misconduct and could
therefore be cautionable as unsporting behavior.
23
2. INFORMATION
24
Law 12 Fouls and Misconduct
FIFA experiment for U-17 World Championship Once
the referee has stopped the match to award a free
kick, any player from the team that committed the
foul who deliberately touches the ball is
considered as delaying the restart of play and
should be punished with a yellow card. This
sanction also applies to a player who touches the
ball when a throw-in or corner kick is awarded in
favor of the opponent and if a player takes the
ball from the goal net after his team has scored
a goal (kick-off for the opponent).
Reason Clear guidelines should stop unsporting
tactics to delay the restart of play, such as
holding the ball for a few seconds or throwing it
away, thereby allowing the defense to regain its
position. It should also stop players fighting
for the ball.
25
The Ball
FIFA has permission to experiment with new goal
line technology at the FIFA U-17 World
Championship and at the FIFA Club World
Championship TOYOTA Cup.
USSF Advice to Referees These experiments
approved by the Board are strictly limited to the
listed competitions and may not under any
circumstances be used in the United States.
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